Using the Recommended Summary Plan for Emergency Care and Treatment (ReSPECT) in a community setting: does it facilitate best interests decision-making?

IF 3.3 2区 哲学 Q1 ETHICS Journal of Medical Ethics Pub Date : 2025-01-19 DOI:10.1136/jme-2024-110144
Karin Eli, Celia J Bernstein, Jenny Harlock, Caroline J Huxley, Julia Walsh, Hazel Blanchard, Claire A Hawkes, Gavin D Perkins, Chris Turner, Frances Griffiths, Anne-Marie Slowther
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Abstract

In the UK, the Recommended Summary Plan for Emergency Care and Treatment (ReSPECT) is a widely used process, designed to facilitate shared decision-making between a clinician and a patient or, if the patient lacks capacity to participate in the conversation, a person close to the patient. A key outcome of the ReSPECT process is a set of recommendations, recorded on the patient-held ReSPECT form, that reflect the conversation. In an emergency, these recommendations are intended to inform clinical decision-making, and thereby enable the attending clinician-usually a general practitioner (GP) or paramedic-to act in the patient's best interests. This study is the first to explore the extent to which ReSPECT recommendations realise their goal of informing best interests decision-making in community contexts. Using a modified framework analysis approach, we triangulate interviews with patients and their relatives, GPs and nurses and care home staff. Our findings show that inconsistent practices around recording patient wishes, diverging interpretations of the meaning and authority of recommendations and different situational contexts may affect the interpretation and enactment of ReSPECT recommendations. Enacting ReSPECT recommendations in an emergency can be fraught with complexity, particularly when attending clinicians need to interpret recommendations that did not anticipate the current emergency. This may lead to decision-making that compromises the patient's best interests. We suggest that recording patients' values and preferences in greater detail on ReSPECT forms may help overcome this challenge, in providing attending clinicians with richer contextual information through which to interpret treatment recommendations.

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在社区环境中使用推荐的紧急护理和治疗总结计划(ReSPECT):它是否促进了最佳利益决策?
在英国,紧急护理和治疗的建议总结计划(ReSPECT)是一个广泛使用的过程,旨在促进临床医生和患者之间的共同决策,或者,如果患者缺乏参与对话的能力,则由患者身边的人进行决策。ReSPECT过程的一个关键成果是一组建议,记录在患者持有的ReSPECT表格上,反映了对话。在紧急情况下,这些建议旨在为临床决策提供信息,从而使主治医生-通常是全科医生(GP)或护理人员-以患者的最佳利益行事。这项研究首次探讨了ReSPECT建议在多大程度上实现了其在社区环境中为最佳利益决策提供信息的目标。使用改进的框架分析方法,我们对患者及其亲属、全科医生、护士和护理院工作人员进行了三角访谈。我们的研究结果表明,记录患者意愿的不一致做法、对建议的意义和权威的不同解释以及不同的情境背景可能会影响ReSPECT建议的解释和制定。在紧急情况下制定ReSPECT建议可能充满复杂性,特别是当主治医生需要解释没有预料到当前紧急情况的建议时。这可能会导致决策损害患者的最大利益。我们建议,在ReSPECT表格上更详细地记录患者的价值观和偏好可能有助于克服这一挑战,为主治医生提供更丰富的背景信息,通过这些信息来解释治疗建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Medical Ethics
Journal of Medical Ethics 医学-医学:伦理
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
9.80%
发文量
164
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Medical Ethics is a leading international journal that reflects the whole field of medical ethics. The journal seeks to promote ethical reflection and conduct in scientific research and medical practice. It features articles on various ethical aspects of health care relevant to health care professionals, members of clinical ethics committees, medical ethics professionals, researchers and bioscientists, policy makers and patients. Subscribers to the Journal of Medical Ethics also receive Medical Humanities journal at no extra cost. JME is the official journal of the Institute of Medical Ethics.
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